One possibility is that the older, fuzzy cloth was better at taking chalk off the balls as they move across the cloth.I played on the old slow cloth for years and don't remember all the skids that the fast-smooth cloth of today gets. Do I just not remember or is the fast cloth of today more prong to skids? Johnnyt
I played on the old slow cloth for years and don't remember all the skids that the fast-smooth cloth of today gets. Do I just not remember or is the fast cloth of today more prong to skids? Johnnyt
LOL. You're probably right. JohnnytWe probably don't remember as many skids on our underwear either!
Yes, I heard him say that a lot. JohnnytIrving Crane said the plastic balls skidded more than the clay balls.
Skid is just an unusual amount of throw. Cloth condition doesn't affect skid or throw, but it can make it more or less obvious.I would think that the tighter the knap of the cloth, the more skid. Skidding is affected by speed, spin, and lack of friction. Clean, smooth balls will skid more on cloth that does not present more surface area from a friction standpoint. Just my opinion.
I await comments about my statement above concerning skidding balls! LOL
Yes, I heard him say that a lot. Johnnyt
He also said it was easier to open up the rack with the new cloth.
I would think that the tighter the knap of the cloth, the more skid. Skidding is affected by speed, spin, and lack of friction. Clean, smooth balls will skid more on cloth that does not present more surface area from a friction standpoint. Just my opinion.
I await comments about my statement above concerning skidding balls! LOL
Yes, that's the distinction I was trying to make between "skid" and "slide". Similar terminology makes these topics harder to discuss for sure - like "deflection" vs. "squirt".These threads on "skid" always seem to end up with people talking about two different things. To me skid involves what PJ is talking about - cling or throw induced by the increased friction of two balls when the point of contact is affected by something like a chalk mark. This is different than how far a ball might slide before it starts rolling due to the type of cloth being used.